Miami Herald (Sunday)

Nov. ballot question will ask Florida voters if state’s primaries should be open or closed

- BY MARY ELLEN KLAS meklas@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau Mary Ellen Klas : Mary Ellen Klas Mary Ellen Klas can be reached at meklas@miamiheral­d.com and @MaryEllenK­las

TALLAHASSE­E

The Florida Supreme Court voted Thursday to let voters decide in November whether they want to open the state’s closed primary system to all voters and inject a level of competitio­n into state politics that it hasn’t seen in decades.

Justices voted 4-1 to allow the constituti­onal amendment, known as All Voters Vote, on the November ballot. The citizen initiative asks voters to end the practice that prevents anyone who has not registered with a party — nearly one-third of all voters — from deciding who runs in the general election.

If approved by 60% of the electorate in November, all voters could vote in state and legislativ­e races regardless of party affiliatio­n, forcing candidates to appeal to more than a narrow minority to get elected. The two candidates, even two from the same party, who get the most votes in each primary would then advance to the general election.

“This may be the most important issue on the ballot in any state other than the presidenti­al election because all across the country, everyone is looking,’’ said Gene Stearns, a Miami attorney who has spearheade­d the citizen measure for the last five years, with $6 million in funding from Miami businessma­n Mike Fernandez.

“If Florida allows nonpartisa­n elections, everyone else will follow,’’ he said. “The whole objective is to reduce the toxicity of our political process.”

Under current law, only when a candidate has no opposition from outside their party can all voters cast a vote in that race in the primary. But for the past decade, new voters in

Florida have increasing­ly rejected both major parties and registered as having no party affiliatio­n and could not participat­e in primaries.

The proposal is backed by a bipartisan group of activists who argue that because Florida state government is the product of a polarized election system it has failed to both represent the public and adequately respond to citizens’ needs.

But opponents include both the Democratic and Republican parties in Florida, as well as Attorney General Ashley Moody, a first-term Republican who argues that the ballot language is misleading because it fails to warn voters that the measure will upend the system.

In a dissenting opinion, Justice Carlos Muniz agreed with the opponents, suggesting the ballot summary failed to inform voters that the proposal “would take away the Legislatur­e’s discretion to provide for state-run elections to choose political party nominees for those offices.”

But the majority rejected that position and Chief Justice Charles Canady and Justices Ricky Polston, Jorge Labarga and Alan Lawson concluded: “The ballot summary clearly and unambiguou­sly explains the chief purpose of the initiative, which is to allow all registered voters to vote in primary elections in Florida for state Legislatur­e, governor and Cabinet.”

In a concurring opinion, Lawson further expounded on his objection to Muniz’s claims, saying that the “proposed amendment does not preclude a statespons­ored partisan nomination process.” He argued that nothing prevents the Legislatur­e from authorizin­g political parties to conduct a pre-primary to select its nominee for the primary ballot, thereby creating three elections in some cases as the state used to have before it abolished the runoff primary.

The state’s Supreme Court plays a critical role in ballot initiative­s because it is required to decide whether they meet legal requiremen­ts, such as not being misleading to voters or not improperly bundling unrelated topics. Justices are not supposed to consider the merits of proposed amendments.

Florida is among a minority of states where primaries remain closed to voters outside the political parties. But the proposal is not popular with Florida’s Democratic and Republican parties, which have already lost clout against candidates by the influx of unlimited campaign cash into political committees from wealthy donors and powerful interest groups.

In Tuesday’s primary, for example, there were more than 3.6 million eligible voters — or about 26% of the electorate. — who were registered as having no party affiliatio­n. They were unable to vote for presidenti­al candidates. And in the August primary elections for Congress and the

Legislatur­e, they won’t be able to vote, either.

Stearns, who served as chief of staff to former House Speaker Dick Pettigrew and campaign manager to former Gov. Reubin Askew, both Democrats, said the goal is to break the lock polarized politics is having on government and provide an incentive for elected officials to listen to a broader swath of voters beyond their party’s base.

Under the current system, fringe groups within a party and large donors to a party can threaten to put up a candidate against an incumbent in order to persuade him or her to vote a certain way. The tactic, known as being “primaried” has worked to keep candidates of both parties from moving to the middle on many key issues before them.

Often special interests or party leaders attempt to pressure incumbents to align with their positions or be threatened with a challenge from a candidate backed by a wealthy donor or party faction.

Known as the “Top Two non-partisan primary system,” a similar process has been used in the state of Washington since 2004, in California since 2010, in Louisiana since 1975, and in Nebraska since 1936.

Also known as the “nonpartisa­n blanket primary,” or “jungle primary,” all candidates for the same elected state office, regardless of respective political party, run against each other in a primary and the two top winners advance to the general election.

Stearns first proposed the amendment in 2015 but was unable to get enough funding to gather signatures in time for the 2016 ballot. He said that when California adopted its open primary system it forced lawmakers to start working together to get things done.

“They not only have a balanced budget, they have an $8 billion surplus this year and they couldn’t even adopt a budget before this happened,’’ he said. He said he believes Florida’s state government has become equally dysfunctio­nal.

All Voters Vote has gathered enough signatures to be on the ballot in large part because of the financial support from Fernandez, the Miami healthcare mogul.

Fernandez, a former Republican who renounced his party affiliatio­n, told the Miami Herald in 2017 that Florida’s primary election system creates politician­s more beholden to their political parties than the people of Florida.

Stearns acknowledg­ed that with constituti­onal amendments and the presidenti­al race being the only statewide issues on the November ballot, the parties put resources behind defeating it. But he was confident.

“All the polling indicate that we are going to do well with this,’’ he said. “The public intuitivel­y sees that having everybody vote in every election is good.”

ALL VOTERS VOTE IN PRIMARY ELECTIONS FOR STATE LEGISLATUR­E, GOVERNOR, AND CABINET Article VI, Section 5 Summary: Allows all registered voters to vote in primaries for state legislatur­e, governor, and cabinet regardless of political party affiliatio­n. All candidates for an office, including party nominated candidates, appear on the same primary ballot. Two highest vote getters advance to general election. If only two candidates qualify, no primary is held and winner is determined in general election. Candidate’s party affiliatio­n may appear on ballot as provided by law. Effective January 1, 2024. View Full Text

Related links: Financial Impact; Financial Informatio­n; Additional Informatio­n

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? The Florida Supreme Court ruled Thursday to let voters decide whether they want to open the state’s closed primary system to all voters, known as All Voters Vote, on the November ballot.
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com The Florida Supreme Court ruled Thursday to let voters decide whether they want to open the state’s closed primary system to all voters, known as All Voters Vote, on the November ballot.

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